All posts by Michelle Hubbard

BFF Teachers

“To a certain extent you have to have a personality that students respond to. But that doesn’t mean you have to be our best friend because that will cause our education to suffer. I hate to admit it, but respect and authority are part of the job. Kids expect adults to give us directions and boundaries, but it’s a balance”. -Vance (Cushman, 2003).

This quote stood out to me because of the word balance. I have felt like I have yet to strike the balance between respected and liked. I feel that though I have developed a good rapport with my students this semester, I wonder if they respect me because they see me as a teacher. I know that my students seem to like me, but I wonder if is the novelty of my status as a student teacher. I have been given a lot of criticism about my personality not being assertive enough to handle high school. I have been told that I’m “too nice” or “too patient” and “let students walk over me”. I however, feel that I have made a lot of progress and ultimately feel that I was able to successfully create a respectful classroom environment. The moment I stopped trying to get students to like me, I started being my authentic self. I tried to use humor and be honest when I made mistakes or didn’t know the answer. I think that respect is incredibly important. High schoolers are not children and as this article says, they shouldn’t be treated as such. Also teachers are not high schoolers and should not act like they are to get students to “like” them. Respect is the most important takeaway I gained from my student teaching experience. I feel that because I showed respect to my students, they in turn, showed respect to me. I feel that though I may not have been assertive enough in my classroom discipline, I successfully created a safe environment where my students enjoyed learning and where I enjoyed teaching. I hope if I continue to teach high school, I can continue to develop a balance between assertiveness, authenticity and respect.

Will you be my mentor?

“Gilligan contends that ‘relationships between girls and adult women may be particularly critical during the transition into adolescence” because girls at this juncture are eager to “seek out and listen attentively to advice from women” (p.6)”
-Rhodes,Davis,Prescott & Spencer, 2007, p. 143

I found this reading to be personally relevant. I in my higher education career have been constantly hoping for a mentor to appear to me, perhaps with a clear sign that they are the person destined to be my mentor. When I hear adults speak highly of their mentors, I long for this relationship in my own life. However, I have found that a mentor does not just choose you and perhaps I need to do more of the seeking out myself. The text states that “mentors, who are well positioned to offer guidance and growth-promoting challenges as girls strive to develop their full potential, may be particularly important” (143). Continue reading Will you be my mentor?

Don’t Ask Don’t Tell

“If he didn’t walk around telling people that he’s gay, there wouldn’t be any problems.”
-Sadowski,2008, p. Kindle edition 2476 from Adolescents at School

This chapter on LGBTQ students in schools was very enlightening. I was surprised by the number of students who still face discrimination in schools, despite the advancement of LGBTQ rights in today’s society. I was struck by the quote above as I feel that as educators, it is imperative that we address LBBTQ issues head on. I am a firm believer in open discussion with students and I find it disheartening that teachers could be the cause of harassment and feeling unwelcome in schools. In light of recent political events, I think of a recent SNL skit that discussed how the popular dating app tinder has multiple options for gender identity, citing this as “the reasons the democrats lost the election”. I feel that the new tide in preventing progressive gender identity can be dangerous. I feel that I personally should not be allowed to have stake in how someone chooses to identify. I think that open mindedness is so important in teaching adolescents. As the chapter mentions, a Gay-Straight alliance can and will help students who identify as LGBTQ and who do not, learn to co-exist peacefully in school and hopefully beyond. I think that schools should be a safe space for students who chose to be openly LGBTQ. For some, due to family beliefs, school may be the only place they are accepted and can truly be who they are. Teachers should create a space in their classroom and throughout the school where students feel safe. I hope that teachers act as positive leaders that demonstrate the importance of treating all students with respect. The teacher who said the above quote is the one causing problems. A student should be able to be openly and fully themselves, especially in school.

“Teachers here really care”

“No one said a teacher was his favorite because she or he was easy”.
– Harper et al., 2014, p. 22

This study on black on latino male high school achievement in NYC resonated a lot due to my student teaching placement. I am in a charter high school in the Bronx that is 60% Latinx and 40% black. I am very familiar with the deficit model thinking in regards to latino and black males due to media and unfortunately adults at the school. While many teachers work extremely hard and set high expectations for their students, some I have heard say “We just have to accept that some of our kids won’t get into college”. Continue reading “Teachers here really care”

SIFE is not SAFE

“This pattern raises questions about whether these students actually had disabilities, or whether SIFE are routinely misclassified due to their low literacy levels and the apparent lack of alternatives for intensive literacy support” (Advocates for Children,2010,p. 27).

This study on SIFE students was very striking. I couldn’t believe the fate of many of these students and the lack of services and attention they received, despite the common knowledge of their background and hardships in and out of school. In my opinion, SIFE is yet another example of good intentions gone wrong in public education. The idea that SIFE students are “misclassified” in special education either based on their low English proficiency and/or as the only means for individualized services, highlights a flaw in public education. Continue reading SIFE is not SAFE